4.6 Article

The reproducibility of skeletal muscle signal intensity on routine magnetic resonance imaging in Crohn's disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 11, Pages 1902-1908

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgh.15068

Keywords

disease outcome; IBD; myosteatosis

Funding

  1. Grant Top Knowledge Institute (Well on Wheat)
  2. Carbokinietics program as part of the NWO-CCC Partnership program
  3. H2020 [848228/DISCOvERIE]

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Background and Aim Myosteatosis is a prognostic factor in cancer and liver cirrhosis. It can be determined noninvasively using computed tomography or, as shown recently, by magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. The primary aim was to analyze the reproducibility of skeletal muscle signal intensity on routine MR-enterographies, as indicator of myosteatosis, in Crohn's disease (CD) and to explore the association between skeletal muscle signal intensity at diagnosis with time to intestinal resection. Methods CD patients undergoing MR-enterography within 6 months from diagnosis and having a maximum of 5 years follow-up were included. Skeletal muscle signal intensity was analyzed on T1-weighted fat-saturated post-contrast images. Intra-observer and inter-observer reproducibilities were assessed by intra-class correlation coefficient and Cohen's kappa. Intra-observer and inter-observer variabilities were determined by Pearson correlation coefficient and displayed by Bland-Altman plots. Time to intestinal resection was studied by Kaplan-Meier analysis. Results Median time between diagnosis and MR-enterography was 5 weeks (inter-quartile range 1-9) in 35 CD patients. Skeletal muscle signal intensity showed good intra-class correlation and substantial agreement (for intra-observer, intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.948, kappa = 0.677; and inter-observer reproducibility, intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.858, kappa = 0.622). Resection free survival was shorter in the low skeletal muscle signal intensity group (P = 0.037). Conclusion Skeletal muscle signal intensity on routine MR-enterographies is reproducible and was associated with unfavorable disease outcome, indicating potential clinical relevance.

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